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                <text>Staff  Publications</text>
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          <name>Title</name>
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              <text>GENDER DIFFERENTIATED CLIMATE CHANGE DISCOURSE IN RURAL COMMUNITIES IN&#13;
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES&#13;
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              <text>he discourse on climate change should provide adequate attention to&#13;
gender differentiated roles and vunerability, either at the local community&#13;
level and international climate change negotiations because the impact of&#13;
climate change affects women and men differently. There is a missing link&#13;
to scientific assessment of climate change and responses to climate through&#13;
a gender dimension and the policies enacted to mitigate and adapt to its&#13;
impacts. Currently, there is insufficient knowledge regarding gender&#13;
differentiated impacts of climate change worldover. However, there has&#13;
been a consensus that in trying to understand climate change in general, we&#13;
need to appreciate gender and gender relations. The discussion explores&#13;
the gender dimension of climate change and the policies enacted to&#13;
mitigate and adapt to its impacts with the aim of developing gender&#13;
sensitive approaches with regards to mitigation measures and adaptation&#13;
strategies in rural communities in developing countrie. Women and men in&#13;
most developing countries are especially vulnerable to climate when they&#13;
are highly dependent on local natural resources for their livelihood. It is&#13;
important to remember, however, that both men and women are not only&#13;
vulnerable to climate change but they are also effective actors or agents of&#13;
change in relation to both mitigation and adaptation. The relationship&#13;
between women and the environment revolves around their concerns for&#13;
providing family food security, fuel, water, and health care. As climate&#13;
change research knowledge is accumulating at a remarkable pace, it is&#13;
intersecting with disasters regarding developing nations in fascinating ways Yet, there remains a significant gap in integrated quantitative and&#13;
qualitative methods for studying climate change perception and policy&#13;
support in rural communities. Men and women extensive theoretical and&#13;
practical knowledge of the environment and resource conservation should&#13;
be given due consideration. Their potential contribution to climate&#13;
mitigation by being part of the intervention strategy should be sufficiently&#13;
exploited</text>
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              <text>Scientific Journal of Pure and Applied ScienceS</text>
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          <name>Date</name>
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              <text>2015</text>
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      <name>Climate change</name>
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      <name>Developing countries</name>
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      <name>Gender</name>
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      <name>Rural communities</name>
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